Experiential and behavioural aspects of emotions can be measured readily but developing a contactless measure of emotions’ physiological aspects has been a major challenge. We hypothesised that different emotion-evoking films can produce distinctive facial blood flow patterns that can serve as physiological signatures of discrete emotions. To test this hypothesis, we created a new Transdermal Optical Imaging system that uses a conventional video camera to capture facial blood flows in a contactless manner. Using this and deep machine learning, we analysed videos of the faces of people as they viewed film clips that elicited joy, sadness, disgust, fear or a neutral state. We found that each of these elicited a distinct blood flow pattern in the facial epidermis, and that Transdermal Optical Imaging is an effective contactless and inexpensive tool to the reveal physiological correlates of discrete emotions.
CITATION STYLE
Fu, G., Zhou, X., Wu, S. J., Nikoo, H., Panesar, D., Zheng, P. P., … Lee, K. (2022). Discrete emotions discovered by contactless measurement of facial blood flows. Cognition and Emotion, 36(7), 1429–1439. https://doi.org/10.1080/02699931.2022.2124960
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